Reason for partial closure: Cockroach infestation and evidence of rodent activity. Inspector saw two live roaches on a kitchen wall and numerous dead roaches including in sinks and in a bag of straws on top of the ice machine, along with rodent droppings on customer shelving near the chips. The facility was not fully closed but was prohibited from handling or preparing any open food, including the Mariscos El Silencito meat department and the bagging of ice. Because of repeated failed inspections in the past two years, an administrative hearing is scheduled for May 23.

Pho Huynh, at 5180 Arlington Ave. in Riverside, which was closed May 8 because of a cockroach infestation and received a failing grade of 85/B, reopened May 15 after the violations were found to have been corrected, and received a new passing grade of 97/A (see report). The facility’s probation was extended.

The county routinely inspects and grades all facilities that handle open, non-pre-packaged food. An A grade (90 to 100 points) is passing. Grades of B (80-89 points) and C (79 or below) are failing and typically require the proprietor to make improvements and be re-inspected. A facility may be closed because of a major violation that can’t immediately be fixed, and it can’t reopen until the violation has been corrected.

This list is published online on Fridays. Any updates as restaurants are reopened or regraded will be included in next week’s list. For more information on inspections of these or any restaurants in Riverside County, visit restaurantgrading.rivcoeh.org.